April 16, 2021

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Fast radio bursts shown to include lower frequency radio waves than previously detected

A burst from the periodically active repeating fast radio burst source 20180916B arrives at the LOFAR telescope. The higher frequency radio waves (purple) arrive earlier than the lower frequency radio waves (red). The inset shows an optical image from the host galaxy of the fast radio burst source and the position of the source in the host galaxy. Credit: Futselaar / ASTRON / Tendulkar
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A burst from the periodically active repeating fast radio burst source 20180916B arrives at the LOFAR telescope. The higher frequency radio waves (purple) arrive earlier than the lower frequency radio waves (red). The inset shows an optical image from the host galaxy of the fast radio burst source and the position of the source in the host galaxy. Credit: Futselaar / ASTRON / Tendulkar

Since fast radio bursts (FRBs) were first discovered over a decade ago, scientists have puzzled over what could be generating these intense flashes of radio waves from outside of our galaxy. In a gradual process of elimination, the field of possible explanations has narrowed as new pieces of information are gathered about FRBs—how long they last, the frequencies of the radio waves detected, and so on.

Now, a team led by McGill University researchers and members of Canada's CHIME Fast Radio Burst collaboration has established that FRBs include radio waves at frequencies lower than ever detected before, a discovery that redraws the boundaries for theoretical astrophysicists trying to put their finger on the source of FRBs.

"We detected down to 110 MHz where before these bursts were only known to exist down to 300 MHz," explained Ziggy Pleunis, a postdoctoral researcher in McGill's Department of Physics and lead author of the research recently published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. "This tells us that the region around the source of the bursts must be transparent to low-frequency emission, whereas some theories suggested that all low-frequency emission would be absorbed right away and could never be detected."

The study focussed on an FRB source first detected in 2018 by the CHIME radio telescope in British Columbia. Known as FRB 20180916B, the source has attracted particular attention because of its relative proximity to Earth and the fact that it emits FRBs at regular intervals.

The research team combined the capacities of CHIME with those of another radio telescope, LOFAR, or Low Frequency Array, in the Netherlands. The joint effort not only enabled the detection of the remarkably low FRB frequencies, but also revealed a consistent delay of around three days between the higher frequencies being picked up by CHIME and the lower ones reaching LOFAR.

"This systematic delay rules out explanations for the periodic activity that do not allow for the frequency dependence and thus brings us a few steps closer to understanding the origin of these mysterious bursts," adds co-author Daniele Michilli, also a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Physics at McGill.

More information: Z. Pleunis et al, LOFAR Detection of 110–188 MHz Emission and Frequency-dependent Activity from FRB 20180916B, The Astrophysical Journal Letters (2021). DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/abec72

Journal information: Astrophysical Journal Letters

Provided by McGill University

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